The cell membrane :]
No.Hydrogen ion cannot pass through the pores of dialysis tubing.
probably not
The type of tubing that is semi-permeable is that tubing used for dialysis. It needs to be semi-permeable to switch or remove molecules for different types of diffusion.
Dialysis tubing is often used to model a cell membrane because it is also a semi-permeable membrane. This means that it only allows certain substances through, not all.
In this scenario, the concentration of solutes (the glucose and starch) is higher inside of the dialysis tubing than it is outside. As such, water will diffuse (via osmosis) into the dialysis tubing causing it to swell.
Dialysis tubing is often used to emulate the selective permeability of the cell membrane.
No.Hydrogen ion cannot pass through the pores of dialysis tubing.
molecular weight higher than the pore size of the tubing or dialysis bag material doesnt go.
A dialysis tubing pore is usually 20nm, but some dialysis tubings are specially made to have smaller or larger pores ranging from .85 nanometers to 30 nanometers.
I don't know unless you give more details!
The dialysis tubing is meant to represent the semi permeable membrane of a cell. Like the cell membrane, dialysis tubing has holes or pores that only allow certain things to pass through. A cell membrane similarly will only allow certain things to pass in and out.
probably not
Gooodd luck i have no clue
NO
They can, actually. That's what the whole dialysis method is based on.
The tubing is permeable; itallows water to pass through the tube wall.
Diffusion